First-half finishing woes doom Tigers vs. Fremd 
              
             By Darryl Mellema 
             About all Wheaton-Warrenville South didn't do in the first  half of Friday's Naperville Invitational contest with Fremd was score. 
            “In the first half, we were dominating and getting chances,”  Wheaton Warrenville South defender Rachel Adomshick said. “We just couldn't put  them in the back of the net. Then in the second half, when we got scored on, we  didn't respond. It's frustrating.” 
            Fremd won the contest 2-0 thanks to second half goals by  Jennifer Freeman and Elise Kotsakis. The Vikings recovered at halftime and got their attack flowing toward the Tigers  goal in the Pool H contest which was played at Wheaton North's Rexilius Field. 
            Wheaton Warrenville South (9-2-1) has been hot recently. The  Tigers saw their four-game winning streak snapped with the loss, though  goalscoring has been a bit of a problem recently. Earlier this week, the Tigers  defeated Wheaton North 1-0 and then needed overtime to defeat Benet 1-0. 
            The Tigers weren't without good first half chances either.  Bridget Shrigley had a free kick saved midway through the half, Fremd  goalkeeper Allison Norenberg had to save at Kate Fowee's feet and Dana Miller  had a strong shot saved. 
But the best chance came moments before Kotsakis sealed the  match when Heidi Ansiel hit a ball that had not been cleared from the penalty  area across the face of the goal only to see the fierce shot go wide. 
            Already behind a goal at that point, things got worse  moments later when Kotsakis hit her hard shot into the net. 
            “We're not scoring a whole lot of goals so we're asking  ourselves to play perfectly defensively,” Callipari said. “Their first goal was  deflating and you can kind of see how things unraveled. Then we had to go  forward in numbers and (Fremd) played with a lot of composure.” 
            Wheaton Warrenville South has key DuPage Valley Conference  matches on its horizon against West Chicago and Glenbard North before returning  next weekend to invitational play. 
            “We were confident we could come out and put on a good show,  and we did in the first half,” Adomshick. “We sort of lost it in the second  half.” 
            Callipari said his team's game with Benet on Thursday may  have impacted the Tigers second half performance. 
            “I was really concerned with the pace of the game and having  played (Thursday) night,” Callipari said. “I was worried that their impact  players would have the stamina and be able to maintain that pace. So we wanted  the ball to do a little more of the movement in the second half and that really  didn't happen.”             
             In order to score, a team has to control  the ball, and the Vikings (8-1-1) hardly saw the ball in the opening 40  minutes. But the second half resurgence allowed Steve Keller's team to win its  third straight match. 
            “We talked about that they were a step ahead of us and  anticipating better and were first to the ball more,” Keller said. “We talked  about us doing that in the second half and I think that our girls did a great  job. They were first to everything.” 
            Kotsakis firmly signaled Fremd's renewed intentions 17  minutes into the half when she had a shot saved by Kelsey Graham, though the  Vikings earned a corner kick. 
            “They are a good team and they put a lot of pressure on us,”  Kotsakis said. “We just had to learn how to deal with it in the second half. We  began to play off each other and play one-touch more.” 
            From that right-sided kick, Fremd took the lead when  Freeman's cross tipped off Graham's gloves and went into the net. 
            “I said to my assistants that I could smell (a goal)  coming,” Keller said. “You could feel that we were about to break through. We  were fortunate on the corner but that's good play. And the second one was a  brilliant goal.” 
            Ahead 1-0, Fremd achieved a higher fluency with its  attacking moves. Michelle Mottonen, Jenny Winberg and Kotsakis were full of  mutual passing and movement and they stretched the Tigers defense.  
            “It was neat to watch them,” Keller said. “Everything they  did was right. They possessed the ball, they went wide with it, they went back  and got it and combined with one another. They made the right decisions and  were very composed.” 
            And Fremd began to get some shots on goal as well. With 10  minutes left in the match, Kotsakis shaped up from easily 25 yards and hit a  thunderbolt that soared into the net. 
            “The whole game, I was trying to shoot high because we  weren't getting a lot of shots,” Kotsakis said. “I kept taking shots and one of  them went in.” 
            Like the rest of the crowd at Rexilius Field, Kotsakis knew  the ball was headed goalward as she hit it. “You kind of know it's going to go  in the net when it hits your foot like that,” Kotsakis said. 
            When the match ended, Fremd's second half brilliance stood  out over whatever was keeping the team from working as cohesively in the  opening 40 minutes. 
            “That was our best half, I think, that we've put together of  the year,” Keller said. 
             
            |